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'Making A Murderer': Media Asks, 'What If Steven Avery Is Guilty?'

Lexie Hammesfahr

6:11 PM, Jan 8, 2016

10:50 AM, Jan 13, 2016

Photo Credit: Netflix / "Making A Murderer"

What if the jury got it right in Steven Avery's case? It seems like a big "if" for many who binge-watched Netflix's "Making A Murderer," but the devil's advocates out there are starting a national debate about the series' accuracy.

This weekend, HLN will premiere "Nancy Grace Mysteries: Teresa Halbach." The one-hour special will discuss the "evidence that was not exposed" in the docuseries. It will also include Grace's 2005 interview with Avery as well as interviews with former Calumet County District Attorney Ken Kratz and Manitowoc County Sheriff Robert Hermann.

And as of Friday morning, we know Grace has at least nine reasons why she thinks Avery is guilty.

"In order to plant evidence, police would have to murder Teresa Halbach, burn her body, get the bones, and then intertwine them with steel-belt tires," Grace says.

Investigation Discovery will also release a special called "Front Page: The Steven Avery Story" later this month. "Dateline NBC" correspondent Keith Morrison will host the show.

Like Grace, the makers behind the special say that it "will present crucial testimony and information that addresses many of the questions surrounding Steven Avery."

Nearly half a million people signed Change.org and White House petitions calling for Avery and nephew Brendan Dassey's presidential pardon. Hacker group Anonymous and the Innocence Project are now involved, too.

"Making A Murderer" is a 10-part docuseries highlighting the supposed pitfalls of the criminal justice system through Teresa Halbach's murder case in Manitowoc County, Wisconsin. It sparked controversy over whether or not the filmmakers left out key evidence that would prove Avery and Dassey's involvement in Halbach's death.

This video includes an image from Getty Images.

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